“She’s in the box right now, and these are going to be relocated to another hive somewhere in Manhattan,” Plankis said.

Plankis is the official beekeeper for the NYPD, and while some people might be stung by the very notion, he loves his job.

“It’s great,” he said. “It really puts you in tune with nature.”

It was not immediately learned exactly how many bees were estimated to be in the tree, or where they came from.

This was at least the third swarm of bees that made headlines in the city in recent weeks.

This past Wednesday, police shut down Montrose Avenue between Lorimer and Leonard streets in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, after a swarm of 24,000 bees landed on the block around noon, according to a DNAInfo report.

The bees landed in a tree and migrated to the ground, the publication reported.

On May 7, the NYPD rounded up thousands of bees that were found swarming all over a block of 28th Street in Astoria, Queens. In that case, police and neighbors said that the bees came from a series of rooftop hives belonging to a local homeowner.